The Jewish Telegraph Agency and similar London
organisations (the Institute of Jewish Affairs) recklessly
spread the rumour that David Irving was one of these
"extremists" who had supplied the "trigger mechanism" for
the Oklahoma city bomb to Timothy McVeigh. For a brief while
this was accepted by McVeigh's lawyer. He later apologised
to Mr Irving. The confidential letter, written to the US
law-enforcement authorities via the FBI attaché at
the American embassy in London, several months before the
Jewish organisations started peddling their smear, shows
clearly who was lying.

Focal Point Publications81 Duke Street, London W1M 5DJ

London, Saturday, November 11, 1995[8:02 PM]

Dear Mr Greenleaf

We publish books, including moderately right-wing
historiography, and it has struck us that today we received
a list of names from an American citizen, accompanied by the
enclosed letter [not
reproduced here], in which he lists 80
people with revisionist views for our mailing list. I have
no idea of his source for these names, but among them is the
name Brigite Nichols, spelt thusly, of "P 0 Box 189, Sperry,
OK 74073."

I do not know if she is a relative of Terry Nichols.
You may wish to pass this information, for what it is worth,
confidentially to those investigating the tragedy at
Oklahoma City.